Importance: Demographic and policy changes have occurred since the last large, representative study of homeless adults in the 1990s, which may affect health care access and use.
Objective: To describe the prevalence of poor health care access and short-term health care and use the Gelberg-Andersen Behavioral Model for Vulnerable Populations to assess the association between changes in homelessness with health care access and short-term care use.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This representative survey of adults experiencing homelessness in California from October 2021 to November 2022 used multistage, venue-based, and respondent-driven sampling.
Purpose: Telemedicine care dramatically expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic. We characterized facilitators and barriers to telemedicine implementation among safety-net primary care clinics serving patients with limited English proficiency (LEP).
Methods: We collected data on telemedicine volume and patient demographics among safety-net clinics participating in a telemedicine learning collaborative.
Addressing social determinants of health (SDoH) is associated with improved clinical outcomes for patients with chronic diseases in safety-net settings. This qualitative study supplemented by descriptive quantitative analysis investigates the degree of alignment between patient and clinicians’ perceptions of SDoH resources and referrals in clinics within the public healthcare delivery system in San Francisco. We conducted a qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews, patient-led neighborhood tours, and in-person clinic visit observations with 10 patients and 7 primary care clinicians.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the wake of the racial injustices laid bare in 2020, on top of centuries of systemic racism, it is clear we need actionable strategies to fundamentally restructure health care systems to achieve racial/ethnic health equity. This paper outlines the pillars of a health equity framework from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, overlaying a concrete example of telemedicine equity. Telemedicine is a particularly relevant and important topic, given the growing evidence of disparities in uptake by racial/ethnic, linguistic, and socioeconomic groups in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the new standard of care that telemedicine represents post-pandemic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Vulnerable populations face numerous barriers in managing chronic disease(s). As healthcare systems work toward integrating social risk factors into electronic health records and healthcare delivery, we need better understanding of the interrelated nature of social needs within patients' everyday lives to inform effective informatics interventions to advance health equity.
Materials And Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews, participant-led neighborhood tours, and clinic visit observations involving 10 patients with diabetes in underserved San Francisco neighborhoods and 10 community leaders serving those neighborhoods.
Int J Environ Res Public Health
October 2021
Characteristics of the neighborhood built environment influence health and health behavior. Google Street View (GSV) images may facilitate measures of the neighborhood environment that are meaningful, practical, and adaptable to any geographic boundary. We used GSV images and computer vision to characterize neighborhood environments (green streets, visible utility wires, and dilapidated buildings) and examined cross-sectional associations with chronic health outcomes among patients from the University of California, San Francisco Health system with outpatient visits from 2015 to 2017.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Board Fam Med
October 2021
Introduction: Social determinants of health (SDoH) influence health outcomes and contribute to disparities in chronic disease in vulnerable populations. To inform health system strategies to address SDoH, we conducted a multi-stakeholder qualitative study to capture the multi-level influences on health for those living in socio-economically deprived contexts.
Methods: Varied qualitative inquiry methods - in-depth interviews, participant-led neighborhood tours, and clinic visit observations - involving a total of 23 participants (10 patients with chronic illnesses in San Francisco neighborhoods with high chronic disease rates, 10 community leaders serving the same neighborhoods, and 3 providers from San Francisco's public health care delivery system).